Overlapping multivoxel patterns for two levels of visual expectation.

According to predictive accounts of perception, visual cortical regions encode sensory expectations about the external world, and the violation of those expectations by inputs (surprise). Here, using multi-voxel pattern analysis (MVPA) of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data, we asked w...

Täydet tiedot

Bibliografiset tiedot
Päätekijät: de Gardelle, V, Stokes, M, Johnen, V, Wyart, V, Summerfield, C
Aineistotyyppi: Journal article
Kieli:English
Julkaistu: 2013
_version_ 1826293282157625344
author de Gardelle, V
Stokes, M
Johnen, V
Wyart, V
Summerfield, C
author_facet de Gardelle, V
Stokes, M
Johnen, V
Wyart, V
Summerfield, C
author_sort de Gardelle, V
collection OXFORD
description According to predictive accounts of perception, visual cortical regions encode sensory expectations about the external world, and the violation of those expectations by inputs (surprise). Here, using multi-voxel pattern analysis (MVPA) of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data, we asked whether expectations and surprise activate the same pattern of voxels, in face-sensitive regions of the extra-striate visual cortex (the fusiform face area or FFA). Participants viewed pairs of repeating or alternating faces, with high or low probability of repetitions. As in previous studies, we found that repetition suppression (the attenuated BOLD response to repeated stimuli) in the FFA was more pronounced for probable repetitions, consistent with it reflecting reduced surprise to anticipated inputs. Secondly, we observed that repetition suppression and repetition enhancement responses were both consistent across scanner runs, suggesting that both have functional significance, with repetition enhancement possibly indicating the build up of sensory expectation. Critically, we also report that multi-voxels patterns associated with probability and repetition effects were significantly correlated within the left FFA. We argue that repetition enhancement responses and repetition probability effects can be seen as two types of expectation signals, occurring simultaneously, although at different processing levels (lower vs. higher), and different time scales (immediate vs. long term).
first_indexed 2024-03-07T03:27:42Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:b9a19951-3e2a-4fc8-a95d-6573966fbcb8
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T03:27:42Z
publishDate 2013
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:b9a19951-3e2a-4fc8-a95d-6573966fbcb82022-03-27T05:04:09ZOverlapping multivoxel patterns for two levels of visual expectation.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:b9a19951-3e2a-4fc8-a95d-6573966fbcb8EnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford2013de Gardelle, VStokes, MJohnen, VWyart, VSummerfield, CAccording to predictive accounts of perception, visual cortical regions encode sensory expectations about the external world, and the violation of those expectations by inputs (surprise). Here, using multi-voxel pattern analysis (MVPA) of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data, we asked whether expectations and surprise activate the same pattern of voxels, in face-sensitive regions of the extra-striate visual cortex (the fusiform face area or FFA). Participants viewed pairs of repeating or alternating faces, with high or low probability of repetitions. As in previous studies, we found that repetition suppression (the attenuated BOLD response to repeated stimuli) in the FFA was more pronounced for probable repetitions, consistent with it reflecting reduced surprise to anticipated inputs. Secondly, we observed that repetition suppression and repetition enhancement responses were both consistent across scanner runs, suggesting that both have functional significance, with repetition enhancement possibly indicating the build up of sensory expectation. Critically, we also report that multi-voxels patterns associated with probability and repetition effects were significantly correlated within the left FFA. We argue that repetition enhancement responses and repetition probability effects can be seen as two types of expectation signals, occurring simultaneously, although at different processing levels (lower vs. higher), and different time scales (immediate vs. long term).
spellingShingle de Gardelle, V
Stokes, M
Johnen, V
Wyart, V
Summerfield, C
Overlapping multivoxel patterns for two levels of visual expectation.
title Overlapping multivoxel patterns for two levels of visual expectation.
title_full Overlapping multivoxel patterns for two levels of visual expectation.
title_fullStr Overlapping multivoxel patterns for two levels of visual expectation.
title_full_unstemmed Overlapping multivoxel patterns for two levels of visual expectation.
title_short Overlapping multivoxel patterns for two levels of visual expectation.
title_sort overlapping multivoxel patterns for two levels of visual expectation
work_keys_str_mv AT degardellev overlappingmultivoxelpatternsfortwolevelsofvisualexpectation
AT stokesm overlappingmultivoxelpatternsfortwolevelsofvisualexpectation
AT johnenv overlappingmultivoxelpatternsfortwolevelsofvisualexpectation
AT wyartv overlappingmultivoxelpatternsfortwolevelsofvisualexpectation
AT summerfieldc overlappingmultivoxelpatternsfortwolevelsofvisualexpectation